Character Will Gardner's Art Deco leather club chair on the CBS television show 'The Good Wife' is part of the Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams collection of sophisticated furniture.

The Good Wife collection from Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams furniture, based on the Emmy-award winning CBS drama "The Good Wife," is the first licensed home decor line associated with a TV show. And the company is getting ready to introduce new pieces to the collection in April - Alicia Florrick, the lead character, is moving into a new office. She became a partner in the fictional law firm featured on the series, which airs Sunday nights on CBS.

"The collection is the first one in TV history and it's all based on fan response," says Beth Kushnick, set decorator for "The Good Wife," which stars Julianna Margulies. Kushnick co-created the collection with furniture company co-founders Mitchell Gold and Bob Williams.

Fans who want Diane Lockhart's vintage chrome-and-glass desk now can get a reproduction from Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams (www.mgbwhome.com). The same with Will Gardner's Art Deco leather club chair.

Kushnick has used Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams furniture for many years, she says, "But there is something about the synergy of Mitchell Gold and the show. The furniture looks so good." The scale and style fit equally well in a home or a TV law office.

"We wanted the line to be available but also extremely elegant and sophisticated," says Kushnick, who has been a set decorator for 30 years. This is her seventh TV show.

"The Good Wife" set is a "very controlled environment, very upscale. We don't do anything messy," she says.

"People have come to expect a level of style on the show - more so than any other show out there."

This is television, so she selects things that will photograph well.

"We need certain colors and fabrics that will not vibrate on camera," she explains.

"I've been able to translate that into pieces people want to have. These are pieces that work incredibly well, adding to existing pieces you have. That's what a set decorator does. You have to have an eye to mix and put together environments."

Consumers can buy the furniture as it's seen on TV or they can opt for fabrics of their choice.

As a set decorator, Kushnick buys at stores just like the fans she decorates for. She pulls from storage, changes lampshades. "I do a lot of recycling."

"I shop at retail stores that are attainable, but the way I put it together kicks it to a different level. The show's aesthetic itself is the closest to my personal aesthetic. It is what I'm most drawn to-and that helps."

Co-designing the collection is "one of the highlights of my career," says the set decorator.

Kushnick may create fantasy, but design helps define a home and the person who lives with in it - on or off the screen.